1. archeology - Noun
2. archeology - Adjective
Alt. of Archeological
Source: Webster's dictionaryAll-India Oriental Conference, 1930, p 118; Indian Culture, 1934, p 193, Indian Research Institute; Linguistic Survey of India, Vol X, pp 455-56, Dr G. A. Grierson ; cf: History and Archeology of India's Contacts with Other Countries from the.. Source: Internet
Archeology has found lots of gifts and dedications that people would make afterwards, such as small terracotta body parts, no doubt representing what had been healed. Source: Internet
Archeology seems to confirm that until about 1000 B.C.E., the end of Iron Age I, Israelite society was essentially a society of farmers and stockbreeders without any truly centralized organization and administration. Source: Internet
Archeology Olmec style stone sculpture from Tiltepec at the Regional Museum of Chiapas The earliest population of Chiapas was in the coastal Soconusco region, where the Chantuto peoples appeared, going back to 5500 BC. Source: Internet
Also employed at 777 Sharazad Boulevard is Ghasi al-Gadi, a 28-year-old Palestinian with a bachelor's degree in archeology from the University of Jordan and a masters in urban planning from Southwest Texas State University. Source: Internet
Gates came in many forms, from the simple stone buttress and timber blocks described by Avery in his work "'Stoning and Fire' at hill fort entrances of southern Britain” (Avery, Michael, World Archeology, Vol. 18, No. 2, Oct., 1986, pp. 216–230. Source: Internet